Industry Risk and Investment Drives Academic Tech Transfer

“The reason the U.S. is the world’s unquestioned leader in turning cutting edge science into useful products is because our system provides critical incentives so the private sector will invest the time, talents and resources needed to go from the lab to the marketplace.”

riskAUTM, which represents the academic technology management profession, just released the results of the survey of its members for 2021. Once again, the results are impressive, particularly considering that the U.S. economy was just beginning to emerge from the devastating effects of the COVID-19 pandemic.

So, if you’re starving for some good news, consider this:

  • Academic institutions formed 996 startup companies in 2021 (that averages to 2.7 companies created every day of the year). Small entrepreneurial companies like these drive American innovation.
  • 6,144 academic spin off companies continued in operation. These companies tend to locate near the parent university, making them critical parts of regional economic development.
  • 794 new products were created from academic patent licenses– that averages to more than two new products introduced every day of the year.
  • 10,347 new licenses and options were executed. Historically about 70% of academic licenses go to small companies.
  • 8,075 patents were issued to academic institutions, and 15,845 new U.S. patent applications were filed.

It’s clear that despite continual attacks on the Bayh-Dole Act, which allows academic institutions to own and manage federally funded inventions without Washington micro-management, our system keeps truckin’ right along, year after year, leading the world.

But there’s another part of the puzzle that’s generally ignored. Critics claim that because the government provided most of the $81.9 billion that supported academic R&D in 2021, that Washington should call the shots on how resulting discoveries are commercialized, particularly how they are priced.

No doubt that’s a lot of money, but here’s how the National Science Foundation characterizes overall U.S. research and development in “The State of U.S. Science and Engineering 2022”:

“R&D performed in the United States totaled $606.1 billion in 2018, and according to preliminary estimates, $656 billion in 2019. The business sector was the main driver of R&D performance, accounting for about 83% of the growth in R&D from 2010 to 2019…

The majority of R&D performance is in experimental development (65%) and applied research (19%), and the business sector dominates in both. With its focus on new and improved goods, services, and processes, the business sector performs 90% of experimental development, and 58% of applied research. Higher education institutions perform the largest proportion of basic research (46%). However, the share of basic research performed by the business sector increased from 18% in 2012 to an estimated 30% in 2019. Since 2010, a few industries—notably chemical manufacturing (including pharmaceuticals and medicine); computer and electronic products; transportation equipment; professional, scientific, and technical services; and information services—account for most R&D performed by the business sector.

Similar to its role in conducting R&D, the business sector funds most of applied research (55%) and experimental development (86%). The share of basic research funded by the business sector increased from 23% in 2010 to 31% in 2019 (preliminary). However, the federal government continues to be the largest source of funding of basic research (41%).

Although federal funding of R&D increased from $127 billion in 2010 to an estimated $139 billion in 2019, the share of total R&D funded by the federal government declined from 31% in 2010 to an estimated 21% in 2019. This decline occurred across all research types and sectors.”

The reason our system thrives is not because the government is shouldering the load for developing inventions made with its funding and companies are free riders, as is often implied. Rather, our system works because companies bring the resources and talents to the table which are required to move academic discoveries from the laboratory into the marketplace. That also means that the private sector is assuming the risks inherent in such a system. And more often than not, these projects fail—and companies take the hit.

Further insight into this process is provided in a new paper, “The Relative Contributions of NIH and Private Sector Funding to the Approval of New Biopharmaceuticals” focused on drug development, the crux of the current debate. The study looked at 23,230 National Institutes of Health (NIH) research grants awarded in 2000 to see which produced patents under Bayh-Dole. They then tracked 8,126 inventions disclosed that resulted in 41 therapies, 18 of which were approved by the FDA.

“NIH funding for the 18 FDA-approved therapies totaled $0.670 billion, whereas private sector funding (excluding post-approval funding) totaled $44.3 billion.”

The report goes on to state:

“Our study results demonstrate that basic discoveries require substantial additional investments, partnerships, and the shouldering of financial risks by the private sector if new therapies are to materialize as FDA-approved therapies. As a case in point, the majority of the funding for the 18 approved drugs in our study came from private sector investments; this was true across all stages of R&D and all therapeutic classes observed. It is important to note that the risk for private sector investment does not end at the moment the product is approved for commercialization. Most FDA-approved therapies had limited peak sales revenues, including four approved therapies that had zero revenues reported in company financial documents.” (emphasis added)

This should not be taken to minimize the tremendous contribution of NIH funding to life science innovation, or the role of federal funding to American innovation. It is a key driver in making breakthrough discoveries. But the reason the U.S. is the world’s unquestioned leader in turning cutting edge science into useful products is because our system provides critical incentives so the private sector will invest the time, talents and resources needed to go from the lab to the marketplace. Otherwise, they remain just interesting science papers.

Taken together, these studies show that our system works. It’s about time that we celebrate it.

 

Share

Warning & Disclaimer: The pages, articles and comments on IPWatchdog.com do not constitute legal advice, nor do they create any attorney-client relationship. The articles published express the personal opinion and views of the author as of the time of publication and should not be attributed to the author’s employer, clients or the sponsors of IPWatchdog.com.

Join the Discussion

2 comments so far.

  • [Avatar for Moocow]
    Moocow
    January 15, 2023 01:14 pm

    Meanwhile, the US government’s contribution to the initial discovery of the Xtandi molecule, in the form of grant support to UCLA, was reported as approximately $500,000. The company has stated its own investment as approx $1.4 billion. Whatever the precise numbers, it’s probably fair to say that the public financial contribution was small, maybe a fraction of one percent. The companies were also expected to assume basically the entire cost of product development, the entire risk of development/approval failure, and the risk of product liability.
    I think there’s no dispute that publicly-funded researchers made an important original contribution absent which Xtandi would not have been created, sure. The interesting question is how that contribution should be valued, given the vastly greater allocation of cost and risk to the licensee companies. Presumably, that value is reflected in the royalties, negotiated ex-ante, that were paid to UCLA over the years. Surely the public research grants were “paid back” many times over by the royalties paid for the licensed patents.
    If the government really wanted a price reduction because it funded some of the underlying research, it could reasonably take that price reduction in the form of a royalty that’s commensurate with the government’s contribution. That, at least, would be commercially rational. But to say “the government made a research contribution, no matter its magnitude or significance, and therefore can exercise basically full control over the downstream product,” that’s not commercially reasonable.

  • [Avatar for James Love]
    James Love
    January 14, 2023 11:14 am

    Pre-approval R&D spending, if taken from actual outlays on research, is a small fraction of the $2.4 billion per product you quote. The trials for Xtandi used for the initial FDA approval were 1,027 patients receiving enzalutamide, and 399 taking a placebo. The per-patient costs from the trial sites were not that expensive, judging from the records obtained from Universities under FOIA. $15k from Wisconsin, for example.